--- Brian M <brian1954(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Why separate "mediation" from
"arbitration"? Why such complicated
dispute resolution procedures? It is almost as if we want to make
it hard and complicated to resolve disputes, something you can only do
if you are determined. What is the logic behind that?
One-size-fits-all solutions are rarely effective. The dispute resolution
process is soft at first and then gets harsher and harsher as one moves through
it. This gives people with good intentions plenty of time to reform before even
the possibility of harsh sanctions are imposable.
Wouldn't mediation work better if the parties knew
that the mediator
seeking a resolution to a dispute/behaviour problem had the ready
means to impose a sanction on any parties deemed not to be
cooperating? Iron fist in the velvet glove. At present, in the
case of real a behaviour problem (as opposed to a good-faith
difference of opinion) mediation is a hoop people have to jump through
to get to arbitration, and anyway it is broken.
I've already proposed that anything agreed to in mediation should be strictly
enforceable. There was a good deal of support for that idea - but I have not
had time to check back on the progress toward that (it could simply be done by
fiat by the ArbCom, but gaining community support first is a good idea).
-- mav
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